Computers can reconstruct heard words

It has long been a dream of man to be able to read minds. Everyone would like to know what another is thinking at a given time. This dream has still not come true. Even with modern technology, we can't read minds. What others think remains a secret. But we can recognize what others hear! This has been proven by a scientific experiment. Researchers succeeded in reconstructing heard words. For this purpose, they analyzed the brain waves of test subjects. When we hear something, our brain becomes active. It has to process the heard language. A certain activity pattern emerges in the process. This pattern can be recorded with electrodes. And this recording can be processed further too! It can be converted into a sound pattern with a computer. The heard word can be identified this way. This principle works with all words. Every word that we hear produces a particular signal. This signal is always connected with the sound of the word. So it "only" needs to be translated into an acoustic signal. For if you know the sound pattern, you'll know the word. The test subjects heard real words and fake words in the experiment. Thus, part of the words did not exist. Despite this, these words could be reconstructed too. The recognized words can be expressed by a computer. It is also possible to have them just appear on a monitor. Now, researchers hope they will soon understand language signals better. So the dream of mind reading continues...

*****an is a member of the Romance language family.
It is closely related to Spanish, French and Italian.
It is spoken in Andorra, in the *****onia region of Spain and on the Balearic Islands.
*****an is also spoken in parts of Aragon and in Valencia.
A total of 12 million people speak or understand *****an.
The language arose between the 8th and 10th century in the Pyrenees region.
It then spread to the south and east through territorial conquests.
It is important to note that *****an is not a dialect of Spanish.

It evolved from Vulgar Latin and is considered an independent language.
Therefore, Spaniards or Latin Americans do not automatically understand it.
Many structures of *****an are similar to other Romance languages.
But there are also a few features that do not occur in other languages.
*****an speakers are very proud of their language.
Learning *****an has been actively promoted by political groups for a few centuries.
Learn *****an - this language has a future!